Friday, November 28, 2008

Final Portfolio

Writing has been the primary means of presenting your research this semester, and the portfolio is an opportunity for us to see your production assembled, providing us a shared space to look for patterns in your work, and assess your writing at this time. It is a chance for you to consider your writing as an integral part of your discipline, of your practice, of your output, and of your work.Integrated Studies is a writing-based course, developed to support you as an artist who writes.

During the semester you have been investigating sites ranging from physical locations (parks, offices, libraries, schools, a bus tunnel, and City Hall) to more conceptual spaces (Calvino’s text “Invisble Cities” and your own proposed 
charrette spaces). For the final writing exploration of this semester, you’ll be investigating your own body of writings as sites of inquiry.

By the time the portfolio is submitted, you will have had exposure to a broad range of writing opportunities (journal sketches, revised drafts, self-reflective essays, proposal/charrette briefs, presentations, revisions, synthesis of resources, and blog entries, among others). Is your writing moving in directions that are helpful to you as an artist? In what ways can you improve upon this process?

For your portfolio (and this list in consistent within all the Integrated Studies courses), please include the following elements:


1. A compilation/portfolio of all your writings from the semester-- this should include EVERYTHING* you have written (a chronological list of your submitted works is included at the bottom of this page, but this packet may also include any notes, research, or mix tapes you have found relevant in your process). All works (wherever possible) should be three-hole punched and submitted in a three-ring binder, labeled with your name and the course title.

2. From these works, you will 
select and foreground three (3) pieces of your writing from this semester which will be the basis of a self-reflective writing introducing the portfolio (see #3 below). These three papers should be clearly separated from the other works in your binder. They may be any three pieces you’ve written--they could be three distinct works, multiple revisions of a single work, or a combination of these things. They may be notes, papers we've already discussed, or something new that you've been developing.

3. 
An introduction/self-reflective piece introducing your portfolio. For length, consider a significant writing (100o words is a nice start, right?), although you may want to explore this writing; I'll read as much as you write (it takes me awhile, but yes, really), and it's a great opportunity to really unpack your work this semester and take some time with your output. What worked? What sucked? Ideally, this paper will include your responses to both the coursework and your own writings. What role does writing fulfill in your artistic practice? How are you taking steps to develop your work? What direction would you like the writing aspect of the course take in the future? Are you seeing your writing process grow? What are your hopes for writing in the coming semester, or coming years at Cornish?

In this self-reflective, introductory (to the portfolio) writing please also describe your process of 
selecting three pieces from the semester. Why are they vital to you now? What links the works together? Is your process of research the same from one piece to the next? Are there common elements in the writings? How are these writings exemplary of your progress this semester?

4. Works Cited. In only a few of our writing projects have you been asked to synthesize resources from outside of the course readings, but we're moving towards a more research-based process in the coming semester, this seems like a great opportunity to get the ball rolling, and confirm we all adopt the same protocol. As listed previously, Cornish Library links to numerous citation guides here

All works for this writing portfolio are Due Monday, December 8, 2008.

Everything* should include--if you choose-- a fair selection of your notes or preliminary writings. You don't need to extract or copy all of the pages from your journal, but if there are specific writings or notes or diagrams you've taken that have helped you go to someplace new in your writing, then yes, by all means, include them here.


Here are embedded descriptions of three of the more developed writings that should be not only included in your portfolio, but also function as landmarks. These are pieces that we've spent more time working with, in both peer review as well as framing, through field work, conversation, and associated readings:



Writing about parks

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